Remarks on the First Hundred Years of Superconductivity

On the occasion of centenary of superconductivity discovery I recall some facts from the first period and attempts to understand the phenomenon. It turns out that most famous physicists of the first half of XX century have tried to solve the puzzle. Bardeen, Cooper and Schrieffer succeeded in 1957. The BCS theory successfully described all known facts and offered new predictions, which soon have been confirmed experimentally contributing to the widespread acceptance of the theory. It have found applications in nuclear physics, theory of neutron stars and cold atomic gases. The discoveries of new superconductors in the last thirty years show that simple BCS model is not enough to understand new unconventional superconductors. The studies of superconductors develop vividly and still fascinate new generations of physicists working in such diverse fields as material science and string theory.

7. In the Nobel lecture H. Kamerlingh Onnes on many occasions credits the work done in Krakow e.g.: { Just as I was thinking about how to do this, the basic classic work of Wroblewski and Olszewski appeared on the static liquefaction of oxygen.